Canadian Football Hall Of Fame - 2010
Here is our trip to Hamilton to visit the Canadian Football Hall Of Fame and Museum! Or trip happened to be the same day as the Hall Of Fame Game held in Saskatchewan that year, so all the good busks of the players we wanted to see were in SK for the events leading up to the game. On This day we were the last guests to see the Grey Cup before it was sent to Saskatchewan for the game
Canadian Football Hall of Fame relocates to Tim Hortons Field
For more Tiger-Cats videos, news, and tickets visit
The Canadian Football Hall Of Fame
Clips from our visit to the Canadian Football hall Of Fame in Hamilton, Ontario. For more info on the Canadian football hall of fame, visit:
2019 CFL Hall of Fame Inductees
Multiple players get inducted into the 2019 CFL Hall of Fame.
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MLA Makowsky To Join Canadian Football Hall of Fame
Premier Wall congratulates Gene Makowsky, MLA for Regina Dewdney, on his election to the Canadian Football Hall of Fame.
REL-MAR Presents Downtown Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Hamilton (2011 population 519,949; UA population 670,580; CMA population 721,053) is a port city in the Canadian province of Ontario. Conceived by George Hamilton when he purchased the Durand farm shortly after the War of 1812, Hamilton has become the centre of a densely populated and industrialized region at the west end of Lake Ontario known as the Golden Horseshoe. On January 1, 2001, the new City of Hamilton was formed through the amalgamation of the former city and the other constituent lower-tier municipalities of the Regional Municipality of Hamilton-Wentworth with the upper-tier regional government. Residents of the old city are known as Hamiltonians. Since 1981, the metropolitan area has been listed as the ninth largest in Canada and the third largest in Ontario.
Hamilton is home to the Royal Botanical Gardens, the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum, the Bruce Trail, McMaster University and Mohawk College. The Canadian Football Hall of Fame can be found downtown right beside Hamilton City Hall and across town to the east, the Canadian Football League's Hamilton Tiger-Cats will begin playing at the new Tim Hortons Field in 2014, which is being built as part of the 2015 Pan American Games.
Partly because of its diverse environment, numerous TV and film productions have been filmed in Hamilton, regulated by the Hamilton Film and Television Office. A growing arts and culture community garnered media attention in 2006 when the Globe and Mail published an article called Go West, Young Artist about Hamilton's growing art scene. The article highlighted local art galleries, recording studios and independent film production.
REL-MAR McConnell Media Company, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada - rel-mar.com
Video Demo: Bill Stephenson - Canadian Football Hall Of Fame Inductee
In 2006 CFRB 1010 wanted to make an inductee video for the Canadian broadcast legend Bill Stephenson. We organized a meeting with Brian Williams and Dave Hodge for this project, to come in and share their comments about Bill's career. This project was narrated by Ron Hewitt of CFRB 1010.
RAW: Larry and the 2015 CFHOF inductees honoured by the University of Saskatchewan Huskies
Larry Reda, along with fellow 2015 Canadian Football Hall of Fame inductees Gene Makowski, Eddie Davis, and Bob O'Billovich, are honoured ahead of the Saskatchewan Huskies game on August 21, 2015.
RAW: CFL Hall-of-Fame game - view from field level
Larry Reda, along with Gene Makowsky, Eddie Davis and Bob O'Billovich, are honoured at the CFL Hall of Fame game between the Saskatchewan Roughriders and Calgary Stampeders at Mosaic Stadium on August 22, 2015.
Ron Smale Hall of Fame Interview
OSA President Ron Smale speaks about the Canadian Soccer Hall of Fame and Museum Golf Tournament
World Boxing Hall of Fame Museum - Omar Sicard
Omar Sicard (Sicard RV's) founded the World Boxing Hall of Fame Museum where he displayed world-class, boxing memorabilia, which he gathered over a lifetime.
Omar died of cancer in 2009. The Sicard family became the first official sponsor of the 'BoxRun' Foundation in 2012 by donating an RV for the team use on their journey, running across Canada, led by former Canadian Olympian Boxer - Mike Strange.
'BoxRun' Foundation raised, and donated $100,000 to Childhood Cancer Canada.
Proceeds from this video to benefit 'BoxRun' Foundation.
BoxRun.org
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REL-MAR Presents - Downtown Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Hamilton (2011 population 519,949; UA population 670,580; CMA population 721,053) is a port city in the Canadian province of Ontario. Conceived by George Hamilton when he purchased the Durand farm shortly after the War of 1812, Hamilton has become the centre of a densely populated and industrialized region at the west end of Lake Ontario known as the Golden Horseshoe. On January 1, 2001, the new City of Hamilton was formed through the amalgamation of the former city and the other constituent lower-tier municipalities of the Regional Municipality of Hamilton-Wentworth with the upper-tier regional government. Residents of the old city are known as Hamiltonians. Since 1981, the metropolitan area has been listed as the ninth largest in Canada and the third largest in Ontario.
Hamilton is home to the Royal Botanical Gardens, the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum, the Bruce Trail, McMaster University and Mohawk College. The Canadian Football Hall of Fame can be found downtown right beside Hamilton City Hall and across town to the east, the Canadian Football League's Hamilton Tiger-Cats will begin playing at the new Tim Hortons Field in 2014, which is being built as part of the 2015 Pan American Games.
Partly because of its diverse environment, numerous TV and film productions have been filmed in Hamilton, regulated by the Hamilton Film and Television Office. A growing arts and culture community garnered media attention in 2006 when the Globe and Mail published an article called Go West, Young Artist about Hamilton's growing art scene. The article highlighted local art galleries, recording studios and independent film production.
REL-MAR McConnell Media Company, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada - admin@rel-mar.com
Grey Cup Parade 1955 in Vancouver, BC
Great footage from a 16mm film of the first Grey Cup Parade ever held in Vancouver, BC, Canada back in 1955. Vancouver's BC Lions joined the Canadian Football League in 1954. Notice the Jack Cullen record store across the street. Jack Cullen work on the local radio stations for decades. I remember him from CKNW.
Exploring Hamilton Falls | Part 1 | Chedokee Falls
Ontario's internationally recognized Niagara Escarpment provides perfect geological conditions for waterfalls to occur, from Tobermory to Niagara Falls. In Hamilton, it's been said that if the Escarpment is the city's crown, then its waterfalls are the sparkling jewels in that tiara. More than 100 waterfalls have been identified within its boundaries, so Hamilton could well be known as the City of Waterfalls.
Chasing waterfalls across the city is a must-do during any summer visit to Hamilton. Home to more than 100 waterfalls tucked behind the trails of the Niagara Escarpment that cuts through the city.
Inviting the day-trippers and weekend warriors to get to know some of our most popular waterfalls and their surrounding attractions and food experiences (to help you refuel for your next adventure).
Bonus: They’re all found minutes from the downtown core. Now there’s something you won’t find anywhere else this close to home.
Chedoke Falls is 15.5 metre urban ribbon waterfall found atop the Niagara Escarpment in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
The watercourse is the Chedoke Creek, an urban creek that runs through the west end of Hamilton and crosses the Bruce Trail and the Radial Trail. Denlow Falls can be found nearby just east of Chedoke Falls.
Nearby attractions include the Bruce Trail, Canadian Football Hall of Fame Museum, Copps Coliseum.
Lower Chedoke Falls is an irregular curtain waterfall found a few hundred metres north of the main Chedoke Falls. It is 16-metres in height and 31-metres wide.
Whitehern
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Whitehern Historic House and Garden in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, built shortly before 1850, is a Late Classical house that is now a historic house museum.At one time, Whitehern was the home of Thomas McQuesten.His historic downtown family home was willed to the City of Hamilton, after the death of the last of his five unmarried siblings in 1968.It is situated on the corner of Jackson Street West and MacNab Street South, just east of the Hamilton City Hall and behind the Canadian Football Hall of Fame museum.
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1988 Winnipeg Blue Bombers - 2014 Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame Induction
The 1988 Winnipeg Blue Bombers were inducted into the 2014 Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame on November 8th, 2014.
It had been four years since the Winnipeg Blue Bombers captured the Grey Cup championship in 1984. Playing out of the West Division, the Bombers finished second in the East with a mediocre 9-9 record. They defeated the Hamilton Tiger Cats 35-28 in the Eastern semi-final and then beat the heavily favoured Toronto Argonauts (14-4) by a score of 27-11 to win the Eastern final. The 76th Grey Cup was held in Lansdowne Park in Ottawa and the Bombers won a tight game over the BC Lions by a score of 22-21. It would be the franchise’s ninth Grey Cup title.
Edmonton Eskimos 1978 - 1982: Tom Wilkinson
Tom Wilkinson
Inducted 1996 (Athlete) & 1997 (Edmonton Eskimos 1978-82)
Tom Wilkinson: Inducted 1996 Football Athlete
Tom Wilkinson spent 10 of his 15 Canadian Football League seasons, as a quarterback, with the Edmonton Eskimos. He never missed a game in those 10 years. He helped them to win five Grey Cups in eight appearances from 1972 to 1981. He is fifth on the Grey Cup list for career pass completions (64) and attempts (116) and is thirteenth overall with 1,613 career completions. His single-game league record of 19 of 21 completed passes was set in 1974. Tom Wilkinson was voted the Most Outstanding Player in the CFL in 1974 and an All-Star in 1974, 1978, and 1979. He was the first player named to the Eskimo Wall of Honor at Commonwealth Stadium in 1982. Tom Wilkinson was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1987. He is now the Head Coach of the University of Alberta Golden Bears.
Tom Wilkinson: Inducted 1997 Edmonton Eskimos 1978-82 Team
The Edmonton Eskimos dominated the Canadian Football League during a five-year span from 1978 through 1982. The teams, coached by Hugh Campbell, won a record five consecutive Grey Cup Championships. They compiled an impressive 60-15-5 won-lost-tied record during the regular season, for a winning percentage of .781, and had an overall record of 70-15-5, for a winning percentage of .806. The Eskimos averaged 32.15 points per game in the regular season and allowed an average of 17.51 points per game. They scored 2,572 points and allowed 1,401. In Grey Cup play, they averaged 25 points per game and allowed 16.2 from 1978 through 1982.
2009 Inductee - Larry W.W. Robinson
2009 Athlete - Football
Biography
Larry Robinson was a receiver, defensive back, and kicker for the Calgary Stampeder Football Team. From 1961 to 1974, he did not miss playing a game. He became the first player in the CFL to score over 1,000 points. One of his most memorable moments occurred when he kicked a crucial field goal, during a blizzard, to secure the Stampeders Western Final win in 1970. He played in the 1968, 1970, and 1971 Grey Cup games. Larry Robinson was the Western Division Leading Scorer in 1964 and 1965 and named the All--Western Defensive Back in 1965, 1971 and 1972.
2000 Inductee - 1948 Calgary Stampeders
2000 Football Team
Biography
The Calgary Stampeders Football Team went undefeated in the 1948 season, including winning the Grey Cup on one of the most memorable and bizarre plays, the Sleeper Play, in football history. In Toronto, on November 27, 1948, the Calgary Stampeders defeated the Ottawa team 12-7. Despite being the only team in Canadian Football League history to play an entire season undefeated, they are also known for turning the Grey Cup into the national festival that it is today. The exploits of the 1948 Grey Cup, played in Toronto, resurrected the Grey Cup, which was nearly forgotten during World War II and made it into the biggest single day sporting event in Canada.
Team Members
Adams, Dave
Anderson, Chuck*
Anderson, Harry*
Aquirre, Johnny
Berry, Dave
Brook, Tom
Carter, Norm*
Chikowsky, Chick*
Dobbin, Jim*
Grogan, Jack
Gyles, Ced
Hanson, Fritz*
Hill, Norm
Hood, Harry*
Iannone, Bert*
Irving, Harry
Kliewer, Cliff
Kwong, Normie
Lear, Les*
Leatham, Bob*
Ludwig, Rube*
McGill, Jack*
McGillis, Archie
Mitchener, Jim, Dr.
Pantages, Rod
Porteous, Frank*
Pullar, Bill*
Rowe, Paul*
Sherriff, Bill
Singer, Rudy*
Spaith, Keith*
Strode, Woody*
Thodos, Pete*
Tomlinson, Dave*
Wilmot, Fred
Wusyk, Bill*
2007 Inductees - 1954-1956 Edmonton Eskimos
2007 Team - Football
Biography
The 1954-1956 Edmonton Eskimo teams won three straight Grey Cups, all against the powerful Montreal Alouettes teams. Pop Ivy revolutionized Canadian football with his innovative coaching, which included the twin-fullback formation and the lonesome quarterback play. The 1954 game featured Jackie Parker's fumble recovery and 84 yard touchdown -- one of the most famous plays in Canadian sports history. The Eskimo players are some of the greatest players to play the game, and include CFL Hall of Famers: Johnny Bright, Bernie Faloney, Normie Kwong, Rollie Miles, Frank Morris, Roger Nelson and Jackie Parker.